How to win regattas

Approach the Regatta One Race At a Time

Hobart/Wm. Smith coach Scott Iklé shares a number of ways to improve your average score, from smart starts to conservative upwind tactics. “Strategy” from our March 2007 issue
By Scott Iklé
Related Tags: Experts
Approach the Regatta One Race At a Time
© Stuart Streuli

One great aspect of our sport is that every sailor will occasionally win a race, or is at least capable of doing so. To put together a series of top finishes over the course of a day, or many days, however, takes experience and regatta management. From sailing hundreds of races a year, college sailors know a good regatta strategy produces the lowest average point total, which ultimately wins the regatta.There are many lessons to be learned from the collegiate racecourse, first and foremost among them is the importance of boatspeed. The adage that speed makes you look smart is very true. With good speed it’s easier to jump out at the start and stay near the front of the pack, and if you do fall back into the pack, speed makes it easier to pass boats. There are countless ways to improve your boatspeed, but a good place to start is getting a tuning guide from your sailmaker and setting aside practice time at the beginning of each sailing season to work with a tuning partner. The top sailors are fast in all conditions and avoid being optimized for only one type of condition, so improve upon the conditions in which you’re weakest. Then, at each regatta, work with your partner to dial in your speed before the start of each race. Don’t just sit there while the veterans take their speed runs. Perhaps you can even ask to join in with them. Your goal should be to start every race at or near top speed.If you have the speed you need, the major challenge while racing then becomes decision making. After sailing hundreds of races a year, the top college sailors learn to anticipate tactical boat-to-boat situations before they happen and avoid simply reacting to an approaching boat. In other words, they learn to think two or three moves ahead. Armed with a tactical vision of how a particular boat-to-boat encounter is going to play out, they can concentrate on executing their moves. Once a tactical decision is made, they sail it out, give it time, analyze whether or not the move worked, then make any necessary adjustment.Another important element of anticipation is to understand the strategic implications of the conditions before the race begins. Keep it simple by categorizing a race into one of three basic types-oscillating breeze, one-side favored, and unknown. In oscillating conditions you must first find the median wind direction. Don’t worry too much about timing the shifts; it’s more important to understand where the mean is in relation to both the high and low readings on both tacks.The goal of racing in an oscillating breeze is to make sure you tack on the lift before it returns to the mean. Stay in phase, sail fast on the lifts, and sail toward the new shift. When you can consolidate on boats, do so by leading nearby boats to the new shift before they consolidate on you when on the opposite tack. Try to stay in the middle of the course, avoid laylines, and treat the last shift into the mark as a persistent shift. Finally, remember to update your mean wind direction throughout the day. With an one-side-favored course, it’s important to understand why one side is favored. Determine whether it’s a geographic shift, a persistent shift, or a current advantage that makes a side favored. Then go early to that side, stay with the group headed that way, and use your leverage to gain on boats. Be careful to balance how far you sail into the favored side and remember to keep tabs on those around you-sail only as far into the side as you need to be ahead of them and avoid overstanding the weather mark.If you don’t know what conditions to expect on the upwind leg, consider sailing in the middle of the course. Try to keep your bow on the tack closest to the mark; this is the lifted tack. Regardless of the conditions, if you sail the lifts or long tack into the middle, you’ll keep your options open and be ready for anything as the race progresses. In order to make a sound tactical decision as the race progresses, you must understand how the following will affect your race: line management, risk versus leverage, and offense versus defense.Line managementCollegiate sailing is revered for the amount of actual starts a sailor experiences in a single season. From all of this experience, college sailors understand the two schools of thought when it comes to starting. The first is to start near the middle of the line when there’s no clear advantage. Use a mid-line start when the line is square, the courses are long, the breeze is up, or you know you have superior boatspeed. With a conservative approach you can also consider moving toward the favored third of the line, avoiding the risks of starting at the end in the mess of a pack, yet benefiting from any line bias or one-side advantage. In other words, the conservative mid-line start keeps you in the game. The second school of thought is to challenge for an end of the line and head immediately toward the advantaged side. Doing so is paramount only on a short course where there’s clearly a favored side, or the starting line so heavily favored that the boat that reaches the advantage first wins the race. This is where experience comes into play, and realizing that it’s only worth taking the risk to win the advantaged side when one end or side is heavily favored. Starting near the end of the line, and only getting a third place in the race may cost you points in the short run, but in the long run it’s a low score that could win you the regatta. With either approach, you need to be at full speed on the line at zero seconds, in all conditions.Risk and leverageLeverage is often referred to as the distance between boats, and how a windshift or wind speed variation affects those boats. Basically, if the wind shifts left with two boats sailing upwind, the left boat gains. If the wind shifts right, the right boat gains. The boat that sails in more wind usually goes faster. But leverage is more complicated than that, and the actual gains a boat makes in a windshift can be calculated if you know the distance between the boats, and the amount of degrees the wind shifted. College sailors sailing short courses don’t have time to make such calculations, but they do understand risk and leverage. The further apart the boats are, the more one gains when the wind shifts, thus the risk increases. But you don’t gain with leverage until you have consolidated with your opponents.How do collegiate sailors typically manage risk and leverage on the short course? The top sailors always lead boats into the new shift or more pressure, an immediate gain on the fleet. Second, they cross when they can, and don’t let a competitor cross. Third, they avoid the corners and laylines. Holding to the middle of the course allows you to minimize losses if you get to the wrong side, or didn’t go hard enough into a shift. Remember, we’re sailing for the best average score of all the races. You have the rest of the race to pass boats-the goal is to be in the top five at the weather mark.Offense versus defenseWhen you find yourself in the middle of the pack during a race, trying to pass boats, you’re sailing in an offensive mode. A good way to claw through the pack is to sail in a mode where your goal is to position yourself to pass boats. When trying to pass boats upwind from behind, you must first realize that there are no clean lanes in the pack, and other boats will try to keep you behind them. But you still need to find the best lane toward the next shift or the favored side of the course. Don’t waste time sailing the wrong tack for a long time looking for a clean lane. Settle on a lane that keeps you in the game. Then look to consolidate when you have made gains. Pass groups of boats early in the race and then pick off individual boats as you approach the finish, avoiding the one-on-one battles. When trying to pass boats, take only educated gambles. If you sail the shifts and lanes smarter than the other boats, you’ll pass them. When sailing in a defensive mode within a race, you’re sailing not to lose places. When at the front of the fleet during a race, or at any time in a series, you’re trying to maintain a point spread with an opponent by not adding additional points to your score. In college sailing there’s an expression, “Low average wins.” Your goal is to minimize your points in all the races sailed and keep your score lower than the entire fleet. That’s why it’s important to race against the fleet, while avoiding tight covers, tacking duals and one-on-one battles, which only drag you deeper into the fleet and worsen your average score. There’s another expression in college sailing, “Keep your third.” You need to understand that sometimes you go after boats, and other times you don’t. When in third, why would you risk taking a gamble to pass two boats if it possibly meant losing more than two points?Pick your battlesIn college sailing we always use the expression that it sometimes, “pays to lose a battle if you can win the war.” Simply stated, you have to understand how to race against an individual within the fleet, within a group against the fleet, and each race within a series. For example, what do you do when there’s a strong favorable current on one side of the course and a competitor breaks from the pack and sails into adverse current? Do you buck or race the trend? When the strategic factors are clear and the decisions are limited, race the trend and sail with the favorable current. Have confidence to win the race with superior boatspeed and handling within the pack.Racing against a group within a fleet is often a difficult concept to understand. There are a number of boats you’re not racing during a regatta. They are not your competition. Yes, you are trying to beat the entire fleet, but pinpoint the competitive boats; keep track of them because they’re your competition. Race against the boat who you know will be at the top of the leader board at the end of the regatta, and let the others go. You don’t need to cover all the competition-you just need to stay in touch.In order to win a regatta, you need to carefully pick your battles. You have to decide when and when not to split from your competition. You don’t get extra points for winning a race by taking more risk. You win races and regattas by managing your risk, picking your battles, and minimizing your points.Finally, avoid the big mistakes, which includes the first-race gamble-you can’t win a regatta in the first race, but you can lose it. Stay in the regatta by sailing the first race conservatively. Avoid putting letters on the scoreboard by checking over your boat to avoid a breakdown, having a sense of where the starting line is, and watching for individual recalls after every start. Avoid collisions, and if you do make contact and you’re in the wrong, take the penalty. Any places you lose by doing a penalty turn are better than a DSQ.Remember, to win a regatta you have to have confidence in your boathandling, boatspeed, and tactics. If you have that, you should then have the patience to sail your own race decisively. Confidence, patience, and decisiveness-they keep you in the hunt at all times.

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Buy out of season

We all need to spend money on our sport at some time, it may be new ropes, a new drysuit or boots or even a new boat.
But whatever you need try to look ahead and don’t buy in haste, chandlers and other suppliers know that during the summer nobody wants to be off the water longer than necessary, so prices will naturally be higher, prices don’t go up, but most things are sold at full retail.
During the winter months we can afford the time to shop around and use mail order so the prices go down, competition is fiercer and sales a plenty.
So plan ahead look for the bargains and buy when prices are low, even if the gear is not needed for a few months, you will be able to tell endless stories a how you saved 30% here and 40% there.

The above comments also apply to buying boats, especially secondhand. People selling boats at the end of a season would far prefer to offload the boat before the winter, it means they do not have to carry out maintenance, and the boat is not taking up space. You should be able to get more bargains in the winter.

Owen

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Boat Handling tips

Want to improve your boathandling. Then pick a day with a moderate breeze and find a quiet piece of water, probably inland at first. Sail out into the middle, take the rudder off, and sail the boat by sail trim and heel anly. You will be surprised by how much the boat alters course using just these, and with time will be able to sail quite competently without a rudder. This will help a lot in tight situations around the racecourse and you will realise what the forces on the boat are when sailing. Good luck, as you will probably look a little daft at first, and be careful not to capsize and loose the rudder, it may not float!

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Dabbie old boys make a plan

Gareth Baxter and Tim Gibbons (both class of 2008)recently delivered a Fast 42(Nemesis) back to CT after the Rio race. With 1620nm to go to CT,and after bare poling a 60 knot gale with huge waves,the yacht lost its rudder. Anyone who knows these yachts will know its virtually impossible to sail the boat without a rudder. See how they resolved the problem, using bed boards,spinnaker pole and rope, and brought Nemesis safely home :

jury rudder

Well done to Gareth,Tim & crew, Dabbies rule.

Owen

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OOPS

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GADHAFI GOLD LOCATED – Scuttlebutt 1/4/2011


An estimated $30 billion in Libyan gold has been found and efforts are underway to freeze the assets. It turns out that for years, Libyan strongman Mohamar Gadhafi has been storing gold in the most unlikely places. Sailboat keels.

It was a perfect place to hide gold procured from oil revenue, an anonymous NATO intelligence source stated. Once cast and painted, they are virtually identical to lead keels. He would move from larger to smaller boats as the price of oil went up and down. He was currently working on a 7.4 ton bulb keel for the first Libyan Volvo Ocean Race 70 entry, thinking that he could strategically move the gold around if things got hot at home.

A savvy measurement team at the Saint Barth’s Bucket regatta noticed a retro schooner had slightly more stability that it should. “At first we thought they might be using spent uranium for added weight, but when we scraped off several layers of bottom paint it turned out to be gold,” noted PRO Peter Craig.

Rumors are rampant that the Middle East revolts are due to the America’s Cup format. Said Russell Coutts, “This explains why Gadhafi went ballistic when he heard of our plans to race multihulls for the next AC instead of a larger version of the IACC monohull.”

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Optimist World Speed record – Scuttlebutt (1.4.2011)

The World Sailing Speed Record Council (WSSRC) this week ratified a new all out speed record for 500 meters, set by 12 year old Brandon Douglas aboard his Opti SUPER GOOSE. Brandon, his father Nate, and two team members carried the Opti to the top of 2,425′ (739 meters) Yosemite Falls, where they rigged and launched SUPER GOOSE over the Falls with young Brandon at the tiller. Verified by radar spotters, Douglas achieved an incredible 107.75 knots for the required distance before bailing with his parachute, landing without incident in the parking lot of Degnan’s Deli. SUPER GOOSE sailed into history during its 10 second voyage, never to be seen again.

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International competition RSA Youth

There is always discussions around this topic and we question why South Africa generally does not do well in International regattas. For what its worth my opinion is :

“Forget about International competition for a while get more kids on Oppies and Dabbies or whatever, apply what money and resources we have on recruitment, maybe even declare an International moritorium for a while . Once we have the numbers then concentrate on high performance etc etc” To back up what I am saying check out this photo by clicking here World Record.

The picture is of a new Guinness World Record for the ‘Largest Parade of Boats’ which was set by the International Optimist Class Association within the waters of Weymouth and Portland, venue for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic sailing events, featuring 318 Optimist sailors aged between 7 and 15 years.

I believe, its possible for this country to gets near to this fleet size,we just need the focus and will. The Hotshots, and there are plenty, will naturally come to the fore and make us all proud.

Owen

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Great new Innovation – you gotta see this clip

Check out this new game for people who are blind,the cricket ball emits a sound so that they find it and hit it,a gret new innovation.See how it works,excellent clip

Blind Cricket

Regards

Owen

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Suck It up

Like Pasta, check this out click here !sluuurp.jpg

owen

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